I am trying to catch up with the posts after holiday. It sounded here that from Issue 5 to Issue 6 transition, HAL was introduced to take care of address decode, originally task of ZX8301, so on Issue 6 boards there is a dangling unused pin on ZX8301. Interestingly just one pin ZX8301 was short of, and missed in the original QL, to drive 16 colours, now free and unused

My QL Issue 6, suffers flair in white colour when in TV mode and connected UHF cable to the Television. My question here is, what is the reason, and how can it be rectified?

I have tried deoxydising pins of PAL chip, also I have got a spare PAL chip from RWAP to experiment with (Thank you Rich). Could it be that all Issue 6 boards suffer this flair in white, because of introduction of HAL and leaving out one pin in ZX8301?

Can anyone explain?Many thanksTomas

Last edited by tcat on Sun Sep 10, 2017 9:09 am, edited 3 times in total.

My TV is quite a modern Thomson make, it gives excellent picture with ZX Speccy and ATARI ST, all in TV mode, no flair in white. QL Picture over RGB-SCART cable is also perfect.

I can try replacing PAL chip, though.

Should it were the UHF modulator, I wonder what could be wrong with it, as it consists of some resistors, ceramic capacitors, a transistor, and there is one ferit adjustment coil. Could it be retuned, because some elyt capacitors drying out in years, those on 12V, assuming here UHF modulator needs a good and smooth 12V source?

If I remember rightly, In the UHF television signal, the bottom of the sync pulses (blacker than black) is the maximum carrier amplitude. And peek white is minimum carrier amplitude. So if you supplied too big a signal (or it thought it was too big a signal) you could effectively stop the carrier which would 'crush' the peek whites.

It could be that one of the components in the modulator has 'aged'. I think if I was trying to repair the modulator, I would first change the transistor, and while it was out check the values of all the resistors.

I suspect that if you adjust the coil, it will change the channel number (usually channel 36)

Thank you. It seems AZTEC modulator found in both ZX and QL. I have looked up the transistor 2N2222 in a local electronics shop.With the specs below, hFe gain is not given, I guess what matters here is the frequency capability here.

Although in Hungarian, the schematics shows AZTEC modulator UM1233, the same model matching QL Issue#6 wiring diagram. It has got three transistors BF199. Any of those can qualify for replacement?

In the QL diagram, there is smoothing elyt 100uF to supply modulator with 5V, not sure if it can have any influence on white flair, but perhaps is also worth inspecting or replacing?

I am also thinking to let temporarily ZX8301 drive address decode, and disabling HAL doing that, defacto downgrading to Issue#5 logic, to see any influence on TV picture quality, not sure what has to be done, bending a pin on HAL and laying a piece of wire from ZX8301? If not too silly an idea?

Before the next post becomes 'help, my QL stopped working!':8301 PCENL decoding has nothing whatsoever to do with the RGB output. It's not 8301 decoding that is handled by the HAL but 8302, and that chip has nothing to do with the video. There are more subtle and not subtle differences in pre-HAL and HAL boards, how did you discern that it must be the HAL that is the problem? As the old saying goes: correlation does not imply causation.Try lowering the composite output amplitude before the input of the modulator, or providing better power decoupling - which is a problem for many parts of the QL motherboard.

Now again studying `QL Service Manual' and Issue#6 diagram. It says composite PAL signal is output/divided to UHF Modulator, capturing in the picture, when you say lowering amplitude, you mean changing values of the resistors R85/R86, how?

Composite PAL feed to UHF modulator

Could it also be some of the modulators' transistors being degraded, worth replacing?